Riley Rh, Holman Cdj, Fletcher Dr
Department of Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine, Royal Perth Hospital, Perth, Western Australia.
Anaesth Intensive Care. 2014 Sep;42(5):614-8. doi: 10.1177/0310057X1404200511.
The American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) scale is a widely used six-point ordinal scale that allows anaesthetists to assign a risk score to each patient scheduled for anaesthesia. Earlier studies of inter-rater reliability in assigning ASA physical status classifications to a standard set of patient descriptions have shown modest agreement. We surveyed 401 anaesthetists practising in Western Australia using descriptions of clinical history, physical examination and investigation results of ten hypothetical adult patients, pre-designed by other researchers, to have ASA class ranging 1 through 5. Anaesthetist respondents were also asked to supply their age, level of training (trainee or faculty) and sex and to indicate whether their training was undertaken mainly in Australia or New Zealand or elsewhere. The Kappa statistic (chance-corrected measure of agreement) was calculated for ten observations by all raters. Responses were received from 151 anaesthetists (response rate 38%); 64% male, 25% trainees; mean age 42 years, range 26 to 68 years; 83% trained in Australia or New Zealand. Calculated Kappa was 0.40. ASA class 2 was identified correctly least frequently and ASA class 1 was identified correctly most often. Correctly identifying ASA class was not related to age, level of training, sex or training region. We found only fair agreement among anaesthetists in assigning ASA class to ten fictitious patients, which was no better than that observed in earlier studies. Further, the range of scores assigned to standard patients' histories by anaesthetists supports earlier concerns about the robustness of this classification.
美国麻醉医师协会(ASA)分级是一种广泛使用的六点顺序量表,可让麻醉师为每位计划接受麻醉的患者赋予一个风险分数。早期关于将ASA身体状况分类应用于一组标准患者描述的评分者间信度研究显示一致性一般。我们使用其他研究人员预先设计的十名假设成年患者的临床病史、体格检查和检查结果描述,对在西澳大利亚执业的401名麻醉师进行了调查,这些患者的ASA分级为1至5级。还要求参与调查的麻醉师提供他们的年龄、培训水平(实习生或教员)和性别,并表明他们的培训主要是在澳大利亚、新西兰还是其他地方进行的。计算了所有评分者对十个观察结果的Kappa统计量(一致性的机会校正测量)。共收到151名麻醉师的回复(回复率38%);男性占64%,实习生占25%;平均年龄42岁,范围为26至68岁;83%在澳大利亚或新西兰接受培训。计算出的Kappa值为0.40。ASA 2级被正确识别的频率最低,ASA 1级被正确识别的频率最高。正确识别ASA分级与年龄、培训水平、性别或培训地区无关。我们发现麻醉师在为十名虚拟患者分配ASA分级时的一致性一般,并不比早期研究中观察到的更好。此外,麻醉师为标准患者病史分配的分数范围支持了早期对该分类稳健性的担忧。